Monday, 24 May 2010

GET RID of STICKY TAPE!

For years collectors have carefully bagged and boarded their precious comic books to keep them safe and then they have sealed the bags with sticky tape. How unwise is that? For a start, people don't know how well the sticky side will perform over time - it could deteriorate fast and leave no grip, or it could end up so super-sticky that you can't reopen the bags without tearing them. Even in the best case where the tape keeps in decent condition and peels easily, there is always the massive RISK that it might catch onto a part of the comic and cause irreparable damage.

Oh yeah, and when you handle tape it can put gum on your fingers that'll end up putting heavy fingerprints on the comic. Why chance it? Get rid of that tape and simply fold the top flap of the bag in behind the board or comic and file it away without the worry of what booby-trap may lie in wait in the future when you go back to look at that favourite comic again! After all, you might want to sell your collection one day and the better it looks and the easier to handle, the more attractive it will be to the most likely buyers - comic dealers.

Saturday, 22 May 2010

Dear Dan Didio


This could be aimed at any publisher of comic books, but since I have grown up with and always had a soft spot for DC Comics, it is being directed at you.
I hope that your sales figures are holding up well through this crushing period of recession? After all, today's new comics are tomorrow's back issues - which is where escapecomics steps in. Truth to tell, this dealer does not buy too many newly published comic books any more and here's why:
Back in the day - well, about 1960 - when American comics began to be widely available in Scotland, I quickly became hooked on them. The US cover price was 10 cents and that worked our at sixpence in British money. In other words, for £1 i could buy 40 comics - that would have cost $4 in the USA. Even though one pound sterling was a lot of money in 1960, the pricing meant that I could build up a nice and fairly complete collection of every title that I liked and even when the price drifted up to 12 then 15 cents it was okay with a keen collector.
Leap forward to the present day and the basic cover price for a comic book is $2.99 which translates at one British chain of comic shops as £2.45 - in other words, even although US inflation since 1960 means that a dollar the is now worth about $7.5 the cover price of comics in the USA has risen 30 times and in the UK 98 times.
Granted the quality of production has greatly improved over the years, and perhaps you print on a better quality of paper, but a thirty fold increase in cover price in 50 years when "real" inflation has only bee 7.5 times?
I don't hold you responsible for the dramatic shift in the exchange rate between the UK and the US (the shift being compounded because air freight is used now instead of sea freight in the sixties) but there is a case for you to answer on your domestic price rocket.
Maybe the ownership of comics publishers being in the hands of gigantic corporations now has some bearing - that would also explain the proliferation of $3.99 comics - after all they will be demanding meaningful profits. But when a product increases in price by four time the national rate of inflation there is something far wrong.
From what I understand, it is not as if the creators have benefitted greatly from the higher cost of comics, although they will benefit when the latest six issues of Character X are turned into a grossly overpriced graphic novel, so we can't point the finger at them.
Time for a rethink dear Dan, why not get back to building your markets on volume - how many young kids are reading comics these days compared to five decades back and how many are being read by adults who were hooked many years ago? Think of the future and get after today's kids and in the process perhaps you will win over some cynical older fans who have pretty well dropped out of your market.

Monday, 17 May 2010

New Blog on the Block


Whoa! How easy was that! A few keystrokes and Escape Comics is up and blogging. We really wanted to do this on our own website but the software package that we use for listing and selling our comics just can't do it - talk about inflexible. One of these days we will rebuild that site ( www.escapecomics.com ) and have everything nicely tied in to our needs.

Anyhow, here we are - we are all about comics and in particular all about back issue comics. Many dealers seem to have decided that the way of the world is to move entirely to graphic novels, but we can't see the sense in this. To be honest, whilst graphics are nice to have, they are very expensive for what they are - reprints compiled from (usually) recently published comic books.

The quality of art, story telling and production in most present day comics is pretty impressive and there is something very enjoyable about the monthly ritual of reading the latest step in the adventures of your latest heroes. But it is frustrating when you miss an issue or two or decide to backtrack and find out more of what happened with a character in the past. That particular desire leads you into the world of back issues and escapecomics is a rapidly growing source that can help you.

We try to price realistically and fairly and if you go for a decent size of purchase, the discounts available really build up. Why not give us a try?

Watch out for our future blog entries, there are plenty of opinions on the industry, and its creators and publishers. Sharing them with you will be fun!